A burial with full military honors is planned for Tuesday at the family plot in Cedar Rapids. Gov. Kim Reynolds has ordered all flags in Iowa to fly half-staff from sunrise to sunset to honor Shanahan.

Pierce was just 5 when her brother enlisted in the Navy on Oct. 5, 1940. She said one of her last memories of him was that he would miss her birthday a week later.

Pierce received her brother’s remains Friday. She is the only sibling left out of six.

“My mom is very honored to welcome her brother home and have him buried with the rest of our family,” said Pierce’s daughter, Cheryl Schemmel. “It’s what her parents would have wanted.”

The Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor destroyed the USS Oklahoma, the battleship Shanahan was on. The ship capsized from multiple torpedo hits, killing 429 crewmen. Only 35 remains were identified and the rest were buried as “unknown,” according to the Department of POW/MIA Accounting Agency.

Scientists identified Shanahan’s remains by using anthropological analysis, circumstantial and material evidence, mitochondrial DNA and autosomal DNA analysis, according to the agency.

Shanahan was born on July 22, 1918. He graduated from high school in 1936 and is remembered as a well-liked man who was proud of his Catholic religion and Irish heritage.

“We just want to honor him. Yes he died a hero, but first and foremost he was my mother’s big brother,” Schemmel said.

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